Obesity prevention program which recommends the 5-2-1-0 guidelines conducted an assessment to find out how many follow the guidelines.
The 5-2-1-0 recommendations in preschool-age children was an effort to reduce the prevalence of obesity. In a study of nearly 400 preschool children, only one child adhered to obesity prevention guidelines over the course of a single day at child care and at home.
‘Preschool children who are overweight or obese have a four-fold odds of being overweight or obese as adults. Changing their food habits and activity pattern can reduce the obesity burden.’
The 5-2-1-0 guidelines recommend children
- eat at least five servings a day of fruits and vegetables
- view less than two hours of screen time
- participate in one hour of physical activity
- consume no sugar-sweetened beverages daily
The study is believed to be the first to examine attainment of the 5-2-1-0 recommendations in preschool-age children who attend full-time child care. Unlike previous studies of the recommendations, it includes objective measures of diet and physical activity.
The study was a 24-hour observational study of the diet and physical activity levels of 398 preschool children. Researchers obtained information on dietary intake, screen time and body mass index at child care and from parents at home. They used electromechanical devices called accelerometers to measure physical activity.
The study was part of the Preschool Eating and Activity Study (PEAS), the first study to examine preschool influences on children's physical activity over the full 24-hour day and over a wide range of weather conditions.
The findings include:
- One of every four children had a body mass index that put them in the overweight category
- Seventeen percent consumed at least five servings of fruits and vegetables
- Half consumed zero sugar-sweetened beverages
- Eighty one percent had less than two hours of screen time
- Less than 1 percent met the activity recommendation
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